Anyone interested in or fascinated by the rise and fall of Sega should take a look at the interview with former Sega of America head, Tom Kalinske on Sega-16.com. I found it particularly interesting that first Sega, and then later Nintendo, both passed on the chance to jointly develop a CD-based game console with Sony. These days, most gamers probably discount the role of American developers and engineers in the the video game console industry, but after reading this, I think that opinion will have to change.
Month: July 2006
Inuyasha Invades Virgin
It looks like Inuyasha is still cool. The Virgin store near my office has a display full of Inuyasha related plushies and clothing. I still love Inuyasha, but I really am looking forward to the conclusion of the story. One of the things that I like about anime is the finiteness of it. Typically a series will have a planned run of 13 or 26 episodes, beginning, middle, and end. I liked that closure and completion, rather than running a series until the life has been completely bled from it **cough***Stargate***cough***. I know Inuyasha has already ended in Japan, so the end should be near here too. And once it is all over, I hope and pray that a decent set of DVDs with some extras and song subtitles will come out. DVDs with 3 episodes and no extras at all are barely above the level of shovelware. Shame on you Inuyasha! I’m sure Kagome would sit him down good for this one.
Mudd’s Women, How Quaint
Over the weekend I caught an episode of Star Trek on G4. It was Mudd’s Women from the original Star Trek series. In this episode, we meet instellar rogue Harry Mudd who, it turns out, is essentially selling women to be the wives of rich men. This is an old favorite of mine because Mudd is an interesting scoundrel and the episode is dripping with 60’s-ish sex appeal, provided you see the uncut episode. I’ve seen this one probably dozens of times, but this weekend’s showing presented me with something new to think about.
It suddenly occured to me that the episode was framing marriage as a way to claim ownership of women. The thought struck me in the scene where Kirk tells one the miners that his buddies have already married the two other women, who it turns out are a lot more fun than Eve, the one he just rescued. He’s actually pissed for two reasons, one the women’s looks are fake, the result of an illegal drug, and two, his buddies have already claimed the best ones! Marriage as a way to claim women is such an old fashioned and quaint notion, that I can’t help but wonder if this was a part of the original script. I mean really, would a bunch of coarse, wealthy dilithium miners in the boonies really think it necessary to marry a bunch of obvious gold diggers in order to have a good time with them? Probably not. But was this something that the network censors forced on them, or was it really part of the message of the episode concerning the plight of women in contemporary times. All of the women came from relatively desperate situations, but surely 300 years from now there would be better options than marrying wealthly men. In the present time, nearly 40 years removed from the original broadcast of Mudd’s Women, things are better for women in the developed countries, but in much of the world opportunities for women continue to be elusive. And in many societies, including the U.S., the debate continues over exactly what rights women should have at all. Something as fundamental as women’s rights should not be the subject of debate, nevertheless from abortion and contraception, to breast ironing and declining birthrates in Europe and Japan, the story is not yet over.
The Chinese government has launched a web site to teach Chinese and promote Chinese culture. Unfortunately, many of the 30 million people studying Chinese around the world must be trying to access the site, www.linese.com, all at once because I can’t get through! I can’t wait to try this out once the traffic dies down or they get more capacity online. My interest in anime and manga drives my interest in learning Japanese and Japanese culture, but these studies really cannot be complete without learning Chinese culture as well. You find out very quickly how much of East Asian language and culture has its origins in China. Indeed the manga fan learns this the first time a kanji smacks ’em in the face! At that point you can either run, or embrace a whole new world. Wow! With China, Japan, and Korea’s growing economic influence and all actively promoting their languages and cultures abroad, this may be shaping up to be an East Asian century.
Geeks Still Not Sexy!
Not only are geeks still not sexy, now they are a threat to the IT industry, in UK at least. This is just the routine, almost periodic, article about the IT industry not being able to attract enough young people in the midst of the offshoring of IT jobs that gutted the industry in the US and apparently the UK as well. I think though, putting any of the blame on geeks and nerds having a bad image is just unfair. Afterall, during the tech boom in the US, geeks were just as geeky, yet lots of so-called “cool ” and “normal” people packed CS classes and worked in IT. Why? Because the jobs were plentiful and the money was good. Right now, geeks and nerds are still a despised class in the eyes of the “normals”, but the real killer for the IT industry was and is the offshoring of IT work which kills the entry level path needed to develop domestic talent.
France just beat Portugal 1-0 to advance to the World Cup final where they’ll play Italy. I generally don’t like recording sports events, so I followed the game using Matchcast. This wasn’t too bad, the updates were useful and the fan chat mildly interesting. Since I’m at work, I have the sound off, so I don’t know what bells and whistles it had there. But since my main objective was to follow the game more or less in real time, it was more than good enough for that. My next problem is juggling the Sunday final with the Chicago NASCAR race! This year I’ll be cheering for Italy because one of the lovely ladies I work with’s husband is Italian, and he’s a big fan. Go Italy! Viva Italia!
Real Piracy
You hear a lot about so-called piracy on the internet these days. The record and movie industries have made quite a big deal about lost sales…yadda yadda yadda. Well here’s a reminder of what real piracy is, the story of a Japanese freighter fighting off pirates near Indonesia’s Sumatra island. Yes kids, there are real pirates in the world, oh and in a battle between pirates and ninja, why ninja would win of course! Ninja are better trained, that should be obvious! 😉
World Cup Blues
Once again the greatest global sporting event goes on without much attention from me, or many in the U.S.. I’m not a huge futbol fan, but I do enjoy the game and watched a handful of matches during the last World Cup. I would like the United States to make a better showing, but even if your team doesn’t go too far, it’s still fun to watch. This year my bane has been money grubbing media companies that make it hard to easily find out who is airing the games on TV! I know now that ESPN is carrying the games in the U.S., but I would never have figured that out from Yahoo’s World Cup site, which is the official FIFA World Cup site, as nowhere can I find a link to this basic information! I suppose they wanted ESPN to pay big money for this, so nothing! There’s plenty of blame for both sides, but it just irks me when simple information for the fans is hidden or omitted for fundamentally stupid reasons. I know they want to make money, but without the fans, they’d be out of business.
Onigiri Hands
Once more I’ve been called upon to make onigiri (ãŠæ¡ã‚Š), rice balls, for the kids. We got some onigiri mixes at Mitsuwa last weekend and my wife bought Nishiki sushi rice which turned out to work very well for this. I feel like Azuma in Yakitate!! Japan except instead of solar hands, I’ve got onigiri hands which won’t stick to the rice. Whenever my wife tries to make rice balls, even with sopping wet hands, the rice just sticks to her like crazy! After much frustration on her part, I got the job of making rice balls as an almost hereditary duty now! That’s cool with me though. One should always be indispensible for a few things!